US employers still reluctant to add many jobs as hiring slows in June
[July 03, 2026] By
CHRISTOPHER RUGABER
WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. employers slowed hiring last month and added only
57,000 jobs, less than half the previous month’s total and a sign
companies still have a cautious economic outlook.
The Labor Department said Thursday that the unemployment rate declined
to a low 4.2% from 4.3% in May, though the drop mostly occurred because
many people out of work gave up looking and were no longer counted as
unemployed.
The figures suggest businesses remain wary of the economy’s health, with
inflation at a three-year high and consumer confidence near
post-pandemic lows. The job market has been stuck in a “low-hire,
low-fire” rut in which the employed enjoy some job security with layoffs
low, but those out of work are struggling to get hired. Strong hiring in
the spring raised hopes the economy was escaping that dynamic, but
Thursday's report suggests job gains are still muted.
“We are in a market that is still very fragile, and still susceptible to
shocks happening,” Nicole Bachaud, labor economist at ZipRecruiter, an
online job platform, said. "There is still a lot of hesitation on the
part of employers and workers themselves to make any moves.” She noted
that other government data shows companies are posting more jobs but not
filling them.
Hiring has improved from last year, when employers added fewer than
10,000 jobs a month, on average. In this year's first half the pace
improved to 92,000. Yet healthy job gains that were initially reported
in April and May were revised lower, from 172,000 down to 129,000 in May
and from 179,000 to 148,000 in April.

Restaurants and bars cut jobs last month, despite the World Cup
Restaurants, bars, and hotels cut 61,000 jobs, a sharp disappointment
for those who expected the World Cup tournament that is taking place in
multiple U.S. cities would lead to at least temporary job gains.
Retailers also shed 7,500 jobs.
Chad Moutray, chief economist at the National Restaurant Association,
said member companies are seeing signs consumers are pulling back on
eating out, particularly outside higher-income households. It reflects a
“K-shaped” economy, where wealthier households pull ahead of middle- and
lower-income ones.
“We continue to hear that a lot of Americans are struggling to make ends
meet," he said. “If you’re catering to the upper-end of the K, you’re
doing fine. If you’re catering to the lower part of the K, you’re seeing
some challenges in the last couple of months.”
Moutray's group has forecast that restaurants will hire 450,000 seasonal
workers this summer, slightly below last year's 470,000.
Denise Beckson, a vice president at Morey's Piers and Beachfront Water
Parks in Wildwood, New Jersey, said her company has hired about 1,500
summer employees this year, roughly the same as last year. But she said
many restaurants and hotels are struggling with higher food costs and
minimum wage increases that have limited their ability to hire.
“Costs continue to rise, and one way to control that is to pull back on
staffing,” she said.
Many Americans worry about the impact of artificial intelligence on
employment, but for now AI may actually be adding jobs. Last month
professional and business services, a category that includes
architecture, engineering, and software development — occupations
expected to be vulnerable to AI — added 36,000 jobs.
Construction firms added workers, possibly because of AI buildout
Blue-collar industries added a modest number of jobs, with manufacturers
adding 3,000 positions and construction firms 11,000.
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Hiring sign for sales professionals is displayed at a store, in
Vernon Hills, Ill., Wednesday, April 15, 2026. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh,
file)
 Scottsville, New York-based Power &
Construction Group added some of those jobs as it seeks to keep up
with the demand for greater electrical capacity in the state. Thomas
“Murph” Murphy, the company's vice president, said they are looking
to hire another 15-20 workers after adding 47 in the past two
months.
The company is seeking more electricians, laborers, and heavy
equipment operators to join the 350 workers on staff, Murphy said.
Murphy said his company is competing for workers with firms building
data centers in other states -- not many are being built in New York
-- and he has to work to convince young people to choose
construction as a career. The firm recently built a training center
to bring newer, younger workers up to speed.
“The grid can’t handle all the new power that everybody’s using,”
Murphy said, noting the increase in laptops, phones, and tablets in
many Americans’ homes. “We need to continuously build the grid. But
it does take time.”
Jobs data could keep Federal Reserve on sidelines
Thursday's report suggests that hiring and wage gains aren't
accelerating enough to worsen inflationary pressures in the economy,
which could allow the Federal Reserve to keep its key rate unchanged
at its current level of about 3.6%.
Previously, many Wall Street investors had expected the central bank
to lift its key rate this year as hiring appeared to be
accelerating. The prospect of no rate cuts lifted the stock market
in mid-morning trading, with the broad S&P 500 index up 0.7%.
“Today’s data hit the sweet spot for markets — strong enough to keep
worries about growth at bay, but soft enough to reduce the
probability of a rate hike,” said Eric Winograd, chief U.S.
economist at AB Global, an asset management firm.
Fed chair Kevin Warsh in Portugal Wednesday reiterated that he would
push inflation back to the Fed’s 2% target, though he wouldn’t
comment on whether the Fed would raise rates at its next meeting,
later this month.

Average paychecks, meanwhile, rose 3.5% from a year ago, a decent
gain but one that still trailed inflation, leaving many Americans
struggling to keep up with rising costs for necessities such as
food, gas, and housing.
Historically, a job gain of just 57,000 would be seen as weak. Yet
as more Americans retire and new immigration has dropped sharply,
the U.S. workforce has shrunk in the past year. As a result, even
gains at that level are enough to keep the unemployment rate
unchanged over time.
Fewer Americans are working or seeking work
Last month, in fact, the workforce declined sharply, with the
percentage of Americans working or looking for jobs falling to
61.5%, down from 61.8% in May. It's the lowest level in five years.
Much of the decline reflected the aging of the population, as more
than 10,000 Americans turn 65 every day and many retire. Yet the
proportion of Americans aged 25 through 54 who are working or
searching for jobs also fell last month.
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